N-terminal amino acid sequence of leukemia derived growth factor (LGF) from human erythroleukemia cell culture |
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Authors: | Akira Mihara Katsumi Fujiwara Seiji Sato Tetsuro Okabe Nobuo Fujiyoshi |
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Affiliation: | (1) Tokyo Research Laboratories, Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co., Ltd., 3-6-6 Asahimachi, Machidashi, Tokyo, Japan;(2) The Third Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Tokyo, Japan |
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Abstract: | Summary A human erythroleukemia cell line, K-562 T1, was adapted to a protein-free chemically defined medium (1); that is, the medium does not contain any proteins such as exogenous hormones, growth factors, serum and serum albumin. The K-562 T1 cells which can proliferate in a protein-free medium are one of the model systems suitably supporting the autocrine hypothesis (2), which claims that cancer cells produce and respond to their own growth factors (3). The K-562 T1 cells were cultured in a protein-free medium at large scale and the growth factors were purified from the conditioned medium. It was found that K-562 T1 cells produce at least two growth factors; one is LGF-I (leukemia-derived growth factor-I) which can stimulate the proliferation of a wide range of human leukemia cell lines and the other is LGF-II (leukemia-derived growth factor-II), which can contribute to the growth of fibroblasts. LGF-I was purified using QAE-Sephadex, Bio Gel P-60 and Mono S FPLC. The purified protein was found to be homogenous by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and NH2-terminal sequence analysis. The molecular weight of LGF-I was 20,000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The 30 NH2-terminal residues of LGF-I are the same as that of ubiquitin. Ubiquitin is a protein found in eukaryotic cells with molecular weight of 8,600. In the nucleus ubiquitin is conjugated to histone 2A to form the nuclear protein A24 which may play a role in regulation of chromatin structure (3), and in the cytoplasm is part of an ATP-dependent non-lysosomal proteolytic pathway (4). However, its physiological significance has not yet been fully resolved. Ubiquitin purified from bovine thymus did not show cell proliferating activity for any cells tested. The results suggest that LGF-I is a new autocrine growth factor with a molecular weight of 20,000 daltons, containing ubiquitin at the NH2-terminal end. This work was supported by funds obtained under the Research and Development Project of Basic Technologies for Future Industries from the Ministry of International Trade and Industry of Japan. Editor’s Statement Identification of sequences identical to ubiquitin associated with the leukemia-derived growth factor described in this report is particularly intriguing considering recent reports of association of ubiquitin with surface membrane receptors of lymphocytes and fibroblasts. References: SCIENCE vol. 231, pgs, 823–829; NATURE vol. 323, pgs 226–232, 1986. David W. Barnes |
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Keywords: | autocrine growth factor leukemia ubiquitin protein-free culture |
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